Switching or reclassifying medicines with established safety profiles from prescription to non-prescription aims to increase timely consumer access to medicines, reduce under-treatment and enhance self-management. However, risks include suboptimal therapy and adverse effects. With a long-standing government policy supporting switching or reclassifying medicines from prescription to non-prescription, the United Kingdom is believed to lead the world in switch, but evidence for this is inconclusive. Interest in switching medicines for certain long-term conditions has arisen in the United Kingdom, United States, and Europe, but such switches have been contentious. The objective of this study was then to provide a comprehensive comparison of pro...
Since August 2012, Italian general practitioners are required to prescribe the generic name of medic...
Since August 2012, Italian general practitioners are required to prescribe the generic name of medic...
Access to effective and affordable medicines (medical care) is considered an equitable right for all...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Switching or reclassifying medicines with established safety profiles from ...
Objective: To identify factors associated with differences between developed countries in reclassify...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Despite similarities in health systems and Trans-Tasman Harmonization of me...
Background: Despite similarities in health systems and Trans-Tasman Harmonization of medicines sched...
Despite similarities in health systems and Trans-Tasman Harmonization of medicines scheduling, New Z...
Background: Australia and New Zealand (NZ) contribute to the international trend of medicines reclas...
<p><b>X</b> = not switched.</p><p>a. In early Australian switches timing differed between the State...
BackgroundAustria has high health resource use compared to similar countries. Reclassifying (switchi...
Background: Widening access to medicines through reclassification (‘switching’) of medicines from pr...
Kaori Nomura,1 Yuki Kitagawa,2 Yasukatsu Yuda,2 Hiromi Takano-Ohmuro2 1Division of Molecular Epidemi...
In recent years, self-medication products have undergone a dramatic change due to the advent of herb...
AbstractGeneric medicines are clinically interchangeable with original brand medicines and have the ...
Since August 2012, Italian general practitioners are required to prescribe the generic name of medic...
Since August 2012, Italian general practitioners are required to prescribe the generic name of medic...
Access to effective and affordable medicines (medical care) is considered an equitable right for all...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Switching or reclassifying medicines with established safety profiles from ...
Objective: To identify factors associated with differences between developed countries in reclassify...
<div><p>Background</p><p>Despite similarities in health systems and Trans-Tasman Harmonization of me...
Background: Despite similarities in health systems and Trans-Tasman Harmonization of medicines sched...
Despite similarities in health systems and Trans-Tasman Harmonization of medicines scheduling, New Z...
Background: Australia and New Zealand (NZ) contribute to the international trend of medicines reclas...
<p><b>X</b> = not switched.</p><p>a. In early Australian switches timing differed between the State...
BackgroundAustria has high health resource use compared to similar countries. Reclassifying (switchi...
Background: Widening access to medicines through reclassification (‘switching’) of medicines from pr...
Kaori Nomura,1 Yuki Kitagawa,2 Yasukatsu Yuda,2 Hiromi Takano-Ohmuro2 1Division of Molecular Epidemi...
In recent years, self-medication products have undergone a dramatic change due to the advent of herb...
AbstractGeneric medicines are clinically interchangeable with original brand medicines and have the ...
Since August 2012, Italian general practitioners are required to prescribe the generic name of medic...
Since August 2012, Italian general practitioners are required to prescribe the generic name of medic...
Access to effective and affordable medicines (medical care) is considered an equitable right for all...